
View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Histoire sociale / Social History (E-Journal, York University) Exhibiting a Nation: Canada at the British Empire Exhibition, 1924–1925 ANNE CLENDINNING* The British Empire Exhibition held in 1924 and 1925 presented a chance for Canada to assert a national identity and a prominent place, as a self-governing, “white” dominion, within the British imperial family of nations. Those responsible for the gov- ernment pavilion consciously sought to understate regional differences and to con- struct and project a unified, homogeneous image of the nation, despite its vast geographic distances and obvious differences of language and race. While their inten- tions were to attract investment and improve export markets for Canadian goods, the exhibition commissioners assembled a set of images intended to sum up the idea of Canada. The resulting national representation proved to be contested, fragmented, and sometimes controversial. But for Canadians who visited the exhibit, the pavilion seemed to speak on an emotional level, inspiring national identification and pride. L’Exposition de l’empire britannique de 1924 et de 1925 a permis au Canada d’affirmer son identité nationale et de se hisser au palmarès des dominions « blancs » du giron de l’Empire britannique. Les responsables du pavillon gouvernemental ont consciemment cherché à minimiser les différences régionales de même qu’à dépein- dre le Canada comme un pays homogène en dépit de son immensité géographique et de ses différences évidentes de langue et de race. Bien qu’ils cherchaient à séduire les investisseurs et à trouver des débouchés pour les produits canadiens à l’exportation, les commissaires à l’exposition ont assemblé un panorama d’images visant à résumer l’idée du Canada. Cela a brossé un tableau contesté, fragmenté et parfois contro- versé du pays. Mais le pavillon semblait faire vibrer la fibre émotive des Canadiens visitant l’exposition, suscitant chez eux un sentiment d’identité et de fierté nationales. FOR TWO CONSECUTIVE summers, that of 1924 and 1925, Great Britain hosted the British Empire Exhibition. Held in the north London suburb of * Anne Clendinning is assistant professor in the Department of History at Nipissing University. The author thanks Nipissing University and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for the financial and scholarly assistance that facilitated this research. Thanks also to the editors of this special issue, Steven High and Barbara Lorenzkowski, as well as Colin Coates, and to Hilary Earl and Sharon Wall for their comments and suggestions on earlier drafts. 80 Histoire sociale / Social History Wembley, this massive undertaking occupied over 220 acres of pavilions, amusements, and water features and drew approximately 25 million visitors over the two seasons that it remained open. While the exhibition was part trade fair and part theme park, the event was ostensibly intended to bring together the nations of the British Empire to celebrate imperial unity and also to increase economic cooperation among the member nations. King George V opened the exhibition on St. George’s Day, April 23, 1924, before an assembled crowd of 100,000 people who ignored the fog and drizzle of an English spring to witness the royal processions and hear the speeches. In his opening remarks, the King described the British Empire as a “fam- ily” of nations. This family included the “white” dominions of Australia and Canada; the dependent colonies such as Kenya and Uganda in British East Africa; the protectorates like Palestine and Malta; and India, whose partial self-government under the 1917 Montague-Chelmsford reforms confirmed the sub-continent’s ambiguous status as somewhere between dominion and colony.1 The King spoke warmly of the need for “fraternal cooperation” within this diverse group and stated that he looked forward to a new prosper- ity and strength of unified purpose for the British Empire after the difficult years of the Great War and its devastating economic aftermath. As further indication of the symbolic unity of the empire, George V sent a telegram to himself, which he received in less than two minutes, the message having trav- elled the “All Red Route” that encircled the globe.2 Canada, as one of the self-governing “white” dominions, occupied a prom- inent place within the imperial family and at the Wembley exhibition. In terms of Canada’s participation, however, the British Empire Exhibition pre- sented the chance not simply to offer allegiance to Britain and the empire, but to assert Canada’s own sense of national identity. For Canadian politicians and intellectuals, that sense of national identity was increasingly tangible by the 1920s, having been strengthened by such factors as Canada’s military efforts in World War I, the dominion’s representation at the 1919 Paris Peace Conferences, and its separate seats in the assembly of the League of Nations.3 This study of Canada’s contribution to the British Empire Exhibition of 1924 and 1925 examines how an emerging Canadian national identity was assembled and communicated to exhibition patrons who visited Wembley. Such a deconstruction involves an analysis of the Canadian pavilion, its con- tents and displays, as well as an exploration of the motivations of the busi- nessmen, politicians, and civil servants behind the event. Previous studies by Peter H. Hoffenberg, E. A. Heaman, and Stuart Murray have shown that Can- ada participated in colonial and international exhibitions from the mid-nine- 1 Maritn Pugh, State and Society: A Social and Political History of Britain, 1870–1997 (London: Arnold, 1994), pp. 239–241. 2 “Glorious Scene in the Stadium”, Daily Telegraph, April 24, 1924, p. 13. 3 William Roy Smith, “British Imperial Federation”, Political Science Quarterly, vol. 36 no. 2 (June 1921), pp. 276–277; Margaret MacMillan, Paris 1919: Six Months that Changed the World (New York: Random House, 2003), pp. 44–48. Canada at the British Empire Exhibition 81 teenth century onwards, as businessmen and politicians used displays of wheat, timber, and minerals to promote trade, to attract investment, and to encourage immigration.4 As these works suggest, international exhibitions presented a means of building national prestige at a time when Canada aimed to distinguish itself as a self-governing colony within the British Empire. Canadian politicians increasingly accepted the view that impressive exhibits were of national significance and therefore should be coordinated by govern- ment-appointed officials and financed from the public purse. E. M. Heaman effectively illustrates that Canada was well represented at the many interna- tional exhibitions of the nineteenth century.5 In contrast, the study of Can- ada’s participation in international exhibitions of the twentieth century has been relatively overlooked, with the possible exception of the 1967 World Exhibition in Montreal, otherwise known as Expo 67.6 Examining the signif- icance and cultural meaning of Canada’s display at the British Empire Exhi- bition of 1924 and 1925 helps bridge that scholarly gap. The Wembley exhibition already holds an important place in the history of Canadian art and national identity, particularly with regard to the Group of Seven. At Wembley in 1924 the seven painters attracted the attention of Brit- ish art critics for their bold interpretations of the Canadian landscape, then on display in the exhibition’s Palace of Arts. Several of the artists, including A. Y. Jackson, Arthur Lismer, and Lawren Harris, stated their views about the need for a truly Canadian form of artistic expression, one that distinguished Canada as a North American nation whose character, mood, and spirit were distinct from those of Europe and Great Britain. Given the objections of sev- eral painters from the Royal Academy of Canadian Art regarding the alleged bias of the selection process in favour of the modernist school, the Group of Seven’s critical acclaim at Wembley was all the more significant, especially as the Tate Gallery purchased one of Jackson’s paintings for its permanent collection.7 While the success of the Group of Seven bolstered their artistic reputations at home, it helped establish the idea at the international level that their paintings embodied “the buoyant, eager, defiant spirit of the nation”.8 Journalist F. B. Housser described the Group’s critical success at Wembley 4 E. A. Heaman, The Inglorious Arts of Peace: Exhibitions in Canadian Society during the Nineteenth Century (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999), pp. 6–8, 182–184, 192–194; Peter H. Hoffenberg, An Empire on Display: English, Indian, and Australian Exhibition from the Crystal Palace to the Great War (Berkley: University of California Press, 2001), pp. 123, 142–143,188; Stuart Murray, “Canadian Participation and National Representation at the 1851 London Great Exhibition and the 1855 Paris Expo- sition Universelle”, Histoire sociale/ Social History, vol. 32, no. 63 (May 1999), pp. 1–22. 5 Heaman, The Inglorious Arts of Peace, pp. 141–142. 6 Alexandra Mosquin, “Advertising Canada Abroad: Canada on Display at International Exhibition, 1920–1940” (PhD dissertation, York University, 2003); L. B. Kuffert, A Great Duty: Canadian Responses to Modern Life and Mass Culture, 1939–1967 (Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen’s Uni- versity Press, 2003), chap. 6. 7 Ann Davis, “The Wembley Controversy in Canadian Art”, Canadian Historical Review, vol. 56, no.
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